Thank you, Michael. For the quarter, Tiptree's revenues were up 19%, excluding unrealized gains and losses driven by growth and insurance underwriting and fee based service revenues. Consolidated net income of 2.2 million was driven by growth in our insurance operations and positive contributions from our mortgage business, partially offset by unrealized investment losses and lower shipping revenues from the sale of our five vessels in 2022. Adjusted net income was 24 million representing a 17.6 annualized adjusted return on average equity. As Michael mentioned, our cash and capital position remained strong. We entered the quarter with over 515 million of cash and equivalents, with roughly one fifth of that figure outside the insurance company. Turning to Fortegra's results for the quarter, premiums and equivalents increased 10% year-over-year to 835 million driven by robust growth in specialty lines and service contracts, partially offset by softness in our retail channel personal lines offerings. The mission activity and the pipeline of new underwriting opportunities remain strong across our specialty lines. Revenues grew by 24% to 407m and the combined ratio improved to 90.2%. Underwriting margins improved over the prior year for both insurance and services offerings, while the expense ratio was stable at 13.8%. Adjusted return on equity for the quarter was approximately 31% annualized. Fortegra's long standing history of disciplined underwriting, combined with the scalability of its technology enabled platform continues to produce strong returns on capital. Specialty insurance markets remain favorable. The E&S market continues to benefit from the inflow of business from admitted markets in addition to rate increases driven by inflation and tighter underwriting conditions. We, along with many of our competitors, believe these trends will continue through 2024 and potentially beyond. Our services lines grew top line in the quarter by 29%, driven by growth in vehicle service contracts and the added production coming from our acquisition of Premia earlier in 2023. We include the next set of charts as a snapshot of Fortegra’s trends over time. Gross written premiums and equivalents have increased 27% annually since 2019 with the vast majority coming from organic growth. Excess and surplus lines represented 27% of our 2.4 billion of written premiums and equivalents for the year-to-date 2023, a significant increase from when we form the surplus lines subsidiary in late 2020. We believe there is a longer-term shift of underwriting talent moving to managing general agencies which provides Fortegra with additional opportunities to partner with those agents and underwrite profitable business. The combined ratio has been very consistent moving from 93% to 91% over the past five years. Even with that improvement, we continue to invest in people and technology to drive efficiencies, improve our underwriting results, and support our growth objectives at Fortegra. Turning to investments, the portfolio into the quarter at 1.2 billion, up 11% year-over-year. 91% is invested in a combination of high credit quality, liquid securities, and cash with an average S&P rating of AA. Book yield was 3.2% at quarter-end up nearly a 120 basis points from the prior year driven by improving yields on money market funds and short duration fixed income securities. Net investment income was just under 20 million for the year, up 92% year-over-year. The duration of our fixed income portfolio is approximately 2.4 years, which positioned us well as maturities roll and the portfolio grows to reinvest at a higher yield, all the while maintaining our high credit quality rating. Flipping to Tiptree Capital, pretax loss for the quarter was 6.1 million, driven primarily by unrealized losses on our investment in Invesc [ph]. Reliance delivered 400,000 of pretext income despite mortgage volumes being down 17% in the quarter. The mortgage servicing asset ended the quarter at 43.5 million on our balance sheet, a 2.1 million increase in 2023. Our mortgage servicing portfolio and cost management measures provided stability in the quarter, and we expect origination volumes and margins to normalize as we look ahead. With that I will turn the call back to Michael to conclude our prepared remarks.